Mallory’s Monthly Reads – October

I wanted to read ten books this month! In an alternate universe, I read twelve. In this one, I read three. I started two more and I’ll finish them both this month. In the meantime, here’s what I finished!

  1. Wyrd Sisters, by Terry Pratchett – Aaron has been a fan of Terry Pratchett for practically his entire life. Recently, he downloaded ten of his favorites onto my Kindle! Remembering that I wanted to have a Halloween theme for my books in the month of October, I decided to read a book about witches! Wyrd Sisters is part of Pratchett’s “Discworld” series, but works as a standalone as well, lucky for me. It’s a bit of a satire on Macbeth, focusing on the witches who use similar spells as the ones in the Scottish play!
    Granny Witherwax, Nanny Ogg, and Magrat Garlick are given a baby by an escaping servant after the king is slain. The baby is said to be the true heir to the throne! The witches agree to help usher the baby to safety and ensure his rightful place as king when the time comes.
    Wyrd Sisters is more funny than scary, to be sure! It’s witty and played very straight. The witches are fearless and are mostly unintimidated by the events that befall them. Things like being captured by the enemy and nearly killed are less traumatizing moments for them and moreover inconvenient instead. The tone of the novel felt very similar to when I read The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy in September. It’s very similar to Aaron’s sense of humor! I believe that means I will enjoy the other books in Pratchett’s canon.
    As I said, I thought Wyrd Sisters to be very funny, and I hope it gets a modern film adaptation! Here were a few of my favorite lines:“The night was as black as the inside of a cat.”

    “I feel like women in general are like this – we don’t super care who has the most power, as long as we get things done.”

    “Particles of raw inspiration sleet through the universe all the time. Every once in a while one of them hits a receptive mind, which then invents DNA or the flute sonata form or a way of making light bulbs wear out in half the time. But most of them miss. Most people go through their lives without being hit by even one. Some people are even more unfortunate. They get them all.”

    “The Ogg grandchildren were encouraged to believe that monsters from the dawn of time dwelt in its depths, since Nanny believed that a bit of thrilling and pointless terror was an essential ingredient of the magic of childhood.”

    “Demons don’t care about the outward shape of things. It’s what you think that matters.”

    “Only in our dreams are we free. The rest of the time we need wages.”

     

  2. Something Wicked this Way Comes, by Ray Bradbury – A spooky carnival? Sign me up for this one! I’ve only been to Halloween Horror Nights once. Everyone I know now is too scared. Weirdos. This novel is ALSO inspired by Macbeth, albeit mostly (if not entirely) in its name only. It takes place in the mid-twentieth century, and is a somewhat chilling story about friendship. I kind of wish this had been required reading for my classmates and I in high school!
    Will and Jim, best friends closer than brothers, are on the verge of their fourteenth birthdays when a mysterious carnival comes to town. The townspeople are enchanted by the scents and sights and sounds, but Jim and Will discover something far more sinister at play, particularly at the hands of the carnival ringmaster of sorts, Mr. Dark.
    I was surprised by how much I liked this book! It wasn’t as scary as I thought it would be, but parts of it did keep me on the edge of my seat. I wonder if the film version would scare me. I find the relationships between the boys, and the relationship between Jim and his late-in-life father Charles, to be simply wonderful. It is a positive depiction of love between friends and father-and-son, which I think there is a lack of in most modern pop culture.
    I imagine that’s why so many guys revere Lord of the Rings so much; not that Tolkien’s masterpiece cannot be enjoyed by women, but that the idea of adventure and friendship (without any kind of homoerotic subtext), is so rarely done right. This is the sort of story that should be given to guys, and give them room to TALK ABOUT THEIR FEELINGS. I see so many men discussing how they feel they cannot properly express their feelings without coming off as effeminate or weak. THAT’s what’s weak right there. If only we were all more communicative and empathetic. We’d all be a much more kinder society.
    I’m rambling. Here’s a few good quotes:“Like all boys, they never walked anywhere, but named a goal and lit for it, scissors and elbows. Nobody won. Nobody wanted to win. It was in their friendship they just wanted to run forever, shadow and shadow.”

    “Mr. Dark nodded, pleased. “What’s your name, boy?” Don’t tell him! thought Will, and stopped. Why not? he wondered, why? Jim’s lips hardly twitched. “Simon,” he said. He smiled to show it was a lie. Mr. Dark smiled to show he knew it.”

    “Evil has only the power that we give it. I give you nothing. I take back. Starve. Starve. Starve.”

  3. American Psycho, by Bret Easton Ellis – I must have seen this movie at least five times by now. It’s the same story, but it feels so different. Apparently when this book was released, it was so obscene that it was wrapped in bookstores. Censors didn’t want people reading it in public, or chance an unready bystander sampling its horror. I don’t agree with censorship, but at least this time, I totally get it.
    Patrick Bateman is an investment banker in the 1980s, and when he’s not at the office (where nobody appears to do any work), he’s either at the most exclusive men’s clubs, the gym, the most expensive restaurants and dance halls, or slicing and dicing up whomever he pleases from the side of the road. Or is he?
    The movie is far more vague with Bateman’s violence. In the book, you learn about each facet of each murder. Each violent, tortured victim is given a horrific death, and the reader knows every morbid detail.
    I am not easily shocked. This book shocked and disturbed me. One particular scene had me horrified to the point that I wondered what kind of a person could write such a thing (I’ll give you a hint: it involves a rat). Thankfully (but not thankfully) I listened to the book on Audible, and the Audible featured an interview with the writer, Bret Easton Ellis. Ellis details that while he certainly never murdered prostitutes or had homicidal fantasies, when he was at the peak of his career (prior to writing this novel), he was surrounded by the banality of money. The clothes everyone wore, who you knew, which parties you went to, where you lived, all the pabulum, was so all-consuming to him that Ellis felt like he couldn’t escape. In the interview, he instantly felt disarming, you know? Like he ISN’T a serial killer. No offense, but Bateman totally comes off as a serial killer.
    To be sure, Patrick Bateman is just the worst. His constant mentions of who designed his suit, his friend’s suit, the dresses of his girlfriend or whomever he’s drinking with that week, gets so tiresome. Ugh, we get it, you have money. His near encyclopedic knowledge of music is much more explored in the book over the movie, as is his time on the receiving end of Lewis Carruthers’ affections. Those bits make him more interesting. The book features a lunch with his younger brother as well as a lunch with his college girlfriend, both in which Bateman is so painfully cringeworthy that it makes you wonder who he really is. We never really know. All we really know is that this guy HIGHKEY idolizes Donald Trump (who, as memory serves, was THE guy of New York City in the eighties, nineties… and now he’s in the White House. More on that later). Trump is mentioned roughly once a chapter, though he never personally appears in the novel. It’s all about getting in the same room as him, partying with him, going to Trump Tower, seeing him at the same restaurant. Oof. Give it a rest, buddy!
    I am still not sure if I found this novel to be too disturbing to be enjoyable. There were points where I didn’t want to finish it, but I pressed on, because at my core, I did want to see how it ended (even if, again, I know the ending after having seen the movie multiple times). The conclusion is so thought-provoking to me. I know I was thinking about it for several days after finishing it. I also decided to look up the short-lived musical version that lives only in clips on Youtube. It didn’t last long, unfortunately, and it didn’t have the funding to be done right. Still, the finale feels the most real. Maybe that’s a flaw. Either way, I want reservations at Dorsia.

I’m hoping I read closer to my ten-book a month goal this month! I’ve read one, started another, and have two in my back pocket to finish from this month. Hopefully I spend more time reading this month. The year is coming closer and closer to an end, and it seems like each day goes faster. That’s how winter works, you see.

Mallory’s Monthly Reads – September

Three books down this month! Two of this month’s reads were inspired by a desire to read some of Aaron’s favorite books. The third was a revisit of one of the greatest literature series of my teenage years. How does that grab ya?

  1. The Once and Future King by T.H. White. Aaron is a big fan of the fantasy/medieval genre. I remember when we first met, I asked him what his favorite book was and this was his near-immediate response! It’s an anachronistic telling on the legend of King Arthur. It’s technically five books in one, and it took me a while to completely finish! Truthfully, I didn’t fully learn the story of King Arthur as a kid. I know what you’re thinking: “Aren’t you a Disney fan? What about The Sword and the Stone?” Yes, I did watch that movie and own the VHS as a kid, but I barely remember it. In fact, it wasn’t until someone I follow on Twitter posted stills of the movie that fit within the context of the book that I started recalling parts of it. Thankfully, I have Disney Plus to re-watch the movie, now that I know the legend from beginning to end!
    I will say that the length of the story made it a little less enjoyable, but I enjoyed the characters and the silly references to then-modern situations (like cars, World War II, etc.). I also never thought I’d ever text anyone “Mordred is a lil’ bitch,” but I’m pretty sure I did that at least twice while reading. I didn’t take note of favorite quotes in this book, because Aaron’s copy is an original edition and if anything tarnished the book I think he’d never forgive me.
  2. Midnight Sun by Stephenie Meyer. In my younger years, as the story of a young wizard boy and the battle for good and evil came to a close, a new fantasy series was beginning to take fruition: Twilight. A romantic young adult series about a human teenage girl falling in love with a permanently teenaged, yet hundred year old, vampire boy. The novel spawned three sequels and iconic film adaptations, including this scene that is, without question, a cultural reset. Bella Swan, the protagonist, was played by then-mocked-now-adored Kristen Stewart, and we were all bidding for the heart of either Taylor Lautner, who played the second love interest Jacob Black, or Robert Pattinson, who played Edward Cullen, the quietly brooding vampire. While 2019 belonged to Timothee Chalamet, 2020 belongs to Robert Pattinson. He returned to the zeitgeist with the 2019 critically acclaimed The Lighthouse. Between starring in this year’s Nolan thriller Tenet and taking on the role of the Dark Knight in the upcoming Batman film, we all have our eyes back on Robert. How perfectly timed is it that Midnight Sun is released.
    Midnight Sun was in its early stages in 2008 when twelve chapters were leaked, and Stephenie Meyer decided to wait to finish it, leaving us “Twilighters” devastated. It was released on August 4. I downloaded it immediately. It was a trip.
    Midnight Sun returns us to Forks, Washington, to retell the story of Twilight from Edward’s perspective. It’s not the greatest book I’ve ever read, and parts of it were overdrawn out to a degree. I’m also no longer fifteen years old, “quivering” with love for a monster I just met. Some of the mooney-eyed talk of passion and how a girl so plain could be so beautiful had me rolling my eyes… but in the most good-natured way. I had fun reading it! And if they wanted to make a movie of it with Timothee Chalamet as Edward, I wouldn’t object! Let it happen! I’m not in charge!
    Two quotes I loved (one’s an overlap from the original, the other is just a good take on modern dating conventions):“You’re doing it again,” she murmured.
    “What?”
    “Dazzling me,” she admitted, meeting my eyes wearily.

    “How silly humans were, to let a six-inch height difference confound their happiness.”

  3. The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams. Another favorite of Aaron’s! His sense of humor is prevalent in both books mentioned here, as well as what I remember from a Terry Pratchett novel I almost read five years ago (we’ll be circling back around to that in a minute). He calls it vaguely British, like Monty Python, and I’m tempted to agree. This book reminded me a bit of The Twilight Zone, with one big distinction: when the paradigm shift occurs, the protagonist just sort of rolls with the punches (in The Twilight Zone the protagonist often loses their mind and cannot accept this change). It was a quick and fun read, and I imagine I’ll read the other four books in the series some other time! A good-humored sci-fi adventure seemed par for the course, considering my penchant for Star Wars lately.
    The writing of this book is so patently amusing that I could have picked swarths of paragraphs that stuck out to me. That said, here’s a few gems:“I went to Cambridge University. I took a number of baths — and a degree in English.”

    “Mr. Prosser wanted to be at point D. Point D wasn’t anywhere in particular, it was just any convenient point a very long way from points A, B, and C. “

    “On Earth it is never possible to be farther than sixteen thousand miles from your birthplace, which really isn’t very far, so such signals are too minute to be noticed.”
    (I Googled this… it’s true!)

    “I repeat, all planet leave is canceled. I’ve just had an unhappy love affair, so I don’t see why anybody else should have a good time. Message ends.”
    (This has big Chris Traeger in “Operation Ann” energy)

I was also going to read “Pratchett’s Women,” a series of essays on the female characters in Terry Pratchett’s canon. Terry Pratchett is unquestionably Aaron’s favorite writer, having read almost, if not all, of his novels. However, I only got about one essay in when Aaron asked “Why are you reading this when you haven’t read any of his books?” A valid point. He provided several recommendations to get me started, and I’m eager to see how I like them!

Overall, a fun month of reading. However, I am more than halfway behind my reading goals. I have read 22 books this year, leaving me thirty to go. If I read ten books a month, I can pull it off. I don’t necessarily think it’s impossible, but considering how it takes me an entire month to read four books, I’m going to have to really focus! In October, I’ll be keeping to the theme of spooky and scary. I’ll explore the typical Halloween spooks (haunted houses, vampires, etc.), but I’ll also be reading a few true-crime novels, bringing in a dose of real-life horror: the American serial killer. Considering the fact that I play true-crime docs as background noise at work, I think this will be easier. My first dalliance: the Audible version of American Psycho. Ya like Huey Lewis and the News?

 

Mallory’s Monthly Reads: Two Audiobooks!

This feels like a cop-out version, because I really only finished two books that I already started prior to this month! That said, I read what I read (and I will finish what I started).

  1. From a Certain Point of View – This is a compilation of short stories in the “Star Wars” canon. Basically, it’s the plot of Episode IV (technically the first movie, AKA not a prequel or a sequel), but told through the eyes of minor or previously unknown characters in the saga. Some of the highlights for me were “Born in the Storm,” which was the story of a stormtrooper rebelling against the Empire; “Eclipse,” which describes Alderaan in its final moments; and “Master and Apprentice;” which was from the perspective of Qui-Gon Jinn (who I don’t really consider a minor character anymore, but… for intents and purposes he is). Because I listened to the audiobook, I had an appreciation for “The Luckless Rodian” and “Added Muscle,” which were from the perspective of Greedo and Boba Fett, respectively. “The Luckless Rodian” was narrated by Neil Patrick Harris, and “Added Muscle” was narrated by Sir Jon Hamm! He’s not a real knight but he could be. I’d allow it. There’s going to be a second compilation later this year for Episode V, and I KNOW I will be enjoying that!
  2. Bygone Badass Broads – Yes. I FINALLY FINISHED this book. It took me less than thirty minutes. I already wrote a post about this book, but I’m going to share some love for Angela Morley. Born Wally Stott, Angela was a composer and conductor, becoming a household name in the UK for BBC Radio listeners. She transitioned between 1970 and 1972, and came back stronger than ever. She went on to compose and arrange music on both the stage and screen, and collaborated frequently with John Williams. That’s right, in this tiny compilation of amazing women throughout history that we may not know, I found a woman who contributed to the life-changing score of “Star Wars.” She was nominated for an Academy Award in 1976, and was the first transgender woman to receive such a nomination. Bad. Ass.

I hope I read more this month, but in the meantime, both of these books were great! I’ve actually made a list of all the books I want to read (or, ahem, finish) by the end of the year. Fingers crossed I make it!

Mallory’s Monthly Reads – June/July

Okay! I went in with the intention of reading seven books this month, so I would have eight to discuss today!

I got through three and a half. SO. I’ll be adding a few more “monthly” reads throughout the rest of the year in hopes of catching up with my 52 books in a year goal.

Of the four books I read, three were GREAT. One was just okay. I think those “just okay” books are what slogs me down in my goal. If I’m not enthusiastic about what I’m reading, then I won’t want to read it. The whole point of this goal is to get more pleasure out of reading and if I’m just not interested in this particular story, why would I take the time to read it?

It goes back to my resolve last month to only read books that grab me in the first two days. I’ll be putting this into practice this month! Until then, let’s dive in to my summer reads:

1. A New Model: What Confidence, Beauty, and Power Really Look Like by Ashley Graham and Rebecca Paley. This is Ashley Graham’s memoir (rather, her life thus far). This book was published in 2017, so it hadn’t covered the past three years of work (including a podcast and a Vogue cover with her husband while pregnant with their first child), but it included her childhood in the mid-west, her journey in the fashion industry, and her philosophy/work ethic. She is one of the first prominent plus-size models in the fashion industry (though I think she’s fed up with the phrase “plus-size”), and is an advocate for more women outside the high fashion standard joining the runway. She talks in the book about struggling early with her sense of self, and becoming a party girl in the early years of her career after moving to New York. She quickly grounded herself (she talks of having a strong relationship with her mother) and established herself as a must-have in the community. She is now represented by IMG Models, one of the biggest agencies in the world!

Here are a few lines/reflections from the book that I loved:

“My mother, assistant, glam squad, and anyone else I spend a lot of time with have to talk positively about themselves, because if they don’t, I check them quickly. (My manager, my agent, my assistant, my publicist, and my book publisher are all curvy women: does that make me biased? Or does that just mean we are really the majority?)”

“You are good enough to make whatever you want to achieve possible. You just need to find your talent and passion—then put a heck of a lot of work into it.”

“Beauty doesn’t last, but how you [make] people feel will.”

2. Born Round: A Story of Family, Food and a Ferocious Appetite by Frank Bruni. This was ANOTHER memoir, one of a writer from a large but loving Italian family. Frank Bruni struggled with his weight as a kid, and fluctuated back and forth between strong and slender from swimming to large and in charge from too much takeout. I certainly felt a kinship with him to a degree. Sometimes your body image takes over how you live your life. I’ve made choices based on how I feel about how I look, how I’ll feel when presented with an opportunity involving food, and denying myself stupid things out of fear of my love of food taking over for me. It’s not a great feeling! That said, I think that he struggled a bit more romantically based on his body image (he would put off dates because he didn’t like his body and didn’t want to risk looking fat on a date!). I’ll also add that dating probably wasn’t SUPER easy when you’re gay and it’s the nineties/early oughts. His reporting got him on Air Force One in the Bush administration, and later took him to Italy as a correspondent! Having just gone to Italy last year, reading this part of his book made me nostalgic. To boot, he wound up as the food critic for the New York Times! A food addict’s dream… and nightmare. That said, apparently it was during this time that he kept the most consistency in his body image journey. It gives me hope!

I found myself saying “Wow, relatable” during quite a few parts of this book, but here’s a few highlights:

“She’d spot another set of stickers on another car and read them aloud, too: “Harvard, Oberlin . . . Fairfield Community College.” She’d pause before the last school, which she’d mention in a lower, sad voice. “Ouch,” she’d add. “Somebody didn’t come through.” I continued to swim so that I’d come through.”

“There are some things you enjoy doing, and there are other things you enjoy having done. And that second kind of enjoyment lasts longer.”

“Vanity’s an erratic ruler, governing some things so ruthlessly that others escape its scrutiny altogether.”

3. Queen’s Peril by E.K. Johnston. That’s right guys, it’s another Star Wars book! In May, I read Queen’s Shadow, which described Padme’s transition from Queen to Senator. Queen’s Peril is the story of Padme’s first few months as Queen of Naboo. Not only do you find out about her own decisions and ideas to be a good queen, you hear about her handmaidens and how they all become friends, and learn to impersonate Padme when the time calls for it. The book serves as both a prequel and is in media res (I hope I used that right… where’s my ninth grade English teacher when I need her?) with The Phantom Menace. As a result, there were a few moments when I thought to myself “Oop! They said the thing!” or “Oop! That’s the thing from the movie!” and “Oop! That’s Anakin!” The final moments of the book are the last scene of A New Hope from Leia’s perspective, and it was so satisfying. Between the strong female friendships and the solid writing, I sort of want this book to be adapted into a movie. Everyone says (rightly) that Millie Bobbie Brown looks like a young Natalie Portman, and I think she’d be an amazing Padme. We shall see. I don’t have any quotes from this one, because it was an audio book. I have just discovered the “clip” tool on Audible, and I think that’s sort of like the “highlight” feature on my Kindle. Time will tell. I like “reading” while I get my steps. It’s a great way to start my morning!

4. The Ride of a Lifetime: Lessons Learned from 15 Years as CEO of the Walt Disney Company by Robert “Bob” Iger. Bob Iger is the current CEO of the Walt Disney Company. He intended to step down earlier this year, but is currently running to keep things afloat in the COVID-19 world we live in now. He has served as President, COO, and CEO of the Walt Disney Company, and ran ABC Television and ABC prior to these roles. In his time leading the company, Disney bought Pixar, Marvel, Lucasfilm, and 21st Century Fox. Bob was also instrumental in the building of Disney Shanghai, which exceeded expectations in its first year. One of the things that stood out to me was that during his presidency, over the course of roughly 24 hours, Bob had to respond to the Pulse Nightclub shooting (after discovering that Pulse was the second target, since the shooter initially went to Disney Springs but was frightened by security), open the new park in Shanghai, and be hands-on in the death of a toddler at the Grand Floridian Resort. That’s a tough day at the office. Nonetheless, Bob carried out Disney business with empathy, an open mind, and an eye on the horizon. His time wasn’t without flaws, but he has been known for his kindness among employees and colleagues. I definitely got that from the book. The end of his book included a full appendix of takeaways for the average person looking to be successful (the eponymous “lessons”). That’s a real sport right there. If you weren’t paying attention while you read (it happens, even to me… but not with this book), he made a Cliff’s Notes! I’m eager, as a Disney fan, to see how he stays involved post-pandemic (if he wants to participate still, that is. He could be excited to retire completely!), and how his successor, Bob Chapek, handles the Disney legacy.

I took a LOT of notes in this one! I won’t list them all, but here are the big ones that stuck out the most:

“Sometimes, even though you’re “in charge,” you need to be aware that in the moment you might have nothing to add, and so you don’t wade in. You trust your people to do their jobs and focus your energies on some other pressing issue.”

“Simply put, people are not motivated or energized by pessimists.”

“Fear of failure destroys creativity.”

“Empathy is a prerequisite to the sound management of creativity, and respect is critical.”

“Managing your own time and respecting others’ time is one of the most vital things to do as a manager.”

“Nothing is a sure thing, but you need at the very least to be willing to take big risks. You can’t have big wins without them.”

“No matter who we become or what we accomplish, we still feel that we’re essentially the kid we were at some simpler time long ago… wherever you are along the path, you’re the same person you’ve always been.”

 

Okay, there were a lot more for this book, but I wanted to save some to reflect on in a separate way. As someone who loves her company, and someone who loves Disney, I admire some of the ways that Bob approaches his leadership. He touched on how ambition can be counterproductive, how you can get so caught up in wanting more at your job that you start to do your actual job less. He had this to say:

“It’s important to know how to find the balance—do the job you have well; be patient; look for opportunities to pitch in and expand and grow; and make yourself one of the people, through attitude and energy and focus, that your bosses feel they have to turn to when an opportunity arises. Conversely, if you’re a boss, these are the people to nurture—not the ones who are clamoring for promotions and complaining about not being utilized enough but the ones who are proving themselves to be indispensable day in and day out.”

I think that I’m indispensable at my job. I work hard, I go the extra mile, and my tenacity makes for quick problem solving. I have a one-on-one meeting with my supervisor this week. I might use that as an opportunity to go over how I feel about work, and how he sees me as an employee. I don’t think he’d have anything negative to say about me, but if there’s more that I can and should be doing, I better do it!

Lastly, I briefly mentioned this in my last post, but Bob had this to say about goal-setting:

“Priorities are the few things that you’re going to spend a lot of time and a lot of capital on. Not only do you undermine their significance by having too many, but nobody is going to remember them all.”

That stuck with me, too! I want to be better about not overwhelming myself with things to do, and then either doing them at a 2% level or not at all. I bet that setting myself up for success means focusing most on the things that matter.

It’s just a nicer way of Ron Swanson’s iconic line: “Never half-ass two things. Whole-ass one thing.”

Ron Swanson and Bob Iger. Capitalist icons.

Now, I’m off to ride my bike, and then maybe listen to the half of the book I need to finish. Spoiler alert: it’s another Star Wars book.